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143 lines
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.. _chapter-contributing:
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============
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Contributing
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============
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We welcome contributions to Ceres, whether they are new features, bug
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fixes or tests. The Ceres `mailing
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<http://groups.google.com/group/ceres-solver>`_ list is the best place
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for all development related discussions. Please consider joining
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it. If you have ideas on how you would like to contribute to Ceres, it
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is a good idea to let us know on the mailing list before you start
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development. We may have suggestions that will save effort when trying
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to merge your work into the main branch. If you are looking for ideas,
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please let us know about your interest and skills and we will be happy
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to make a suggestion or three.
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We follow Google's `C++ Style Guide
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<http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml>`_ and
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use `git <http://git-scm.com/>`_ for version control. We use the
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`Gerrit <https://ceres-solver-review.googlesource.com/>`_ to collaborate and
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review changes to Ceres. Gerrit enables pre-commit reviews so that
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Ceres can maintain a linear history with clean, reviewed commits, and
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no merges.
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We now describe how to set up your development environment and submit
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a change list for review via Gerrit.
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Setting up your Environment
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===========================
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1. Download and configure ``git``.
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* Mac ``brew install git``.
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* Linux ``sudo apt-get install git``.
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* Windows. Download `msysgit
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<https://code.google.com/p/msysgit/>`_, which includes a minimal
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`Cygwin <http://www.cygwin.com/>`_ install.
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2. Sign up for `Gerrit
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<https://ceres-solver-review.googlesource.com/>`_. You will also
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need to sign the Contributor License Agreement (CLA) with Google,
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which gives Google a royalty-free unlimited license to use your
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contributions. You retain copyright.
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3. Clone the Ceres Solver ``git`` repository from Gerrit.
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.. code-block:: bash
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git clone https://ceres-solver.googlesource.com/ceres-solver
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4. Build Ceres, following the instructions in
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:ref:`chapter-building`.
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On Mac and Linux, the ``CMake`` build will download and enable
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the Gerrit pre-commit hook automatically. This pre-submit hook
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creates `Change-Id: ...` lines in your commits.
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If this does not work OR you are on Windows, execute the
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following in the root directory of the local ``git`` repository:
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.. code-block:: bash
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curl -o .git/hooks/commit-msg https://ceres-solver-review.googlesource.com/tools/hooks/commit-msg
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chmod +x .git/hooks/commit-msg
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5. Configure your Gerrit password with a ``.netrc`` (Mac and Linux)
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or ``_netrc`` (Windows) which allows pushing to Gerrit without
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having to enter a very long random password every time:
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* Sign into `http://ceres-solver-review.googlesource.com
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<http://ceres-solver-review.googlesource.com>`_.
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* Click ``Settings -> HTTP Password -> Obtain Password``.
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* (maybe) Select an account for multi-login. This should be the
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same as your Gerrit login.
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* Click ``Allow access`` when the page requests access to your
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``git`` repositories.
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* Copy the contents of the ``netrc`` into the clipboard.
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- On Mac and Linux, paste the contents into ``~/.netrc``.
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- On Windows, by default users do not have a ``%HOME%``
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setting.
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Executing ``setx HOME %USERPROFILE%`` in a terminal will set up
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the ``%HOME%`` environment variable persistently, and is used
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by ``git`` to find ``%HOME%\_netrc``.
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Then, create a new text file named ``_netrc`` and put it in
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e.g. ``C:\Users\username`` where ``username`` is your user
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name.
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Submitting a change
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===================
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1. Make your changes against master or whatever branch you
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like. Commit your changes as one patch. When you commit, the Gerrit
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hook will add a `Change-Id:` line as the last line of the commit.
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Make sure that your commit message is formatted in the `50/72 style
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<http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html>`_.
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2. Push your changes to the Ceres Gerrit instance:
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.. code-block:: bash
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git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
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When the push succeeds, the console will display a URL showing the
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address of the review. Go to the URL and add at least one of the
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maintainers (Sameer Agarwal, Keir Mierle, or Alex Stewart) as reviewers.
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3. Wait for a review.
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4. Once review comments come in, address them. Please reply to each
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comment in Gerrit, which makes the re-review process easier. After
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modifying the code in your ``git`` instance, *don't make a new
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commit*. Instead, update the last commit using a command like the
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following:
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.. code-block:: bash
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git commit --amend -a
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This will update the last commit, so that it has both the original
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patch and your updates as a single commit. You will have a chance
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to edit the commit message as well. Push the new commit to Gerrit
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as before.
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Gerrit will use the ``Change-Id:`` to match the previous commit
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with the new one. The review interface retains your original patch,
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but also shows the new patch.
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Publish your responses to the comments, and wait for a new round
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of reviews.
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